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Everybody Has One- A Favorite Rose Gardening Tip

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Rose gardeners are famous for their love for any new and helpful rose gardening tip. Growing beautiful roses is such an addictive hobby that many gardeners are anxious to find out all that they can about the subject. Here are a few of the favorite rose gardening tips I’ve learned from my friends.

Rose Gardening Tip 1 – Prune when the Forsythia blooms. Most roses should be pruned in early spring. The blooming of forsythia is a great reminder that it’s time to get out and trim those bushes.

Rose Gardening Tip 2 – Give them phosphorous. Roses are heavy feeders. And, the food they’ll really thrive on is one that contains a good dose of phosphorous. When you look at the numbers on your plant food, the phosphorous level is indicated by the middle number.

Rose Gardening Tip 3 – Don’t mulch with wood chips. Roses love mulch, especially over a cold winter. However, wood chips require nitrogen to decompose. They will actually rob your rose bushes of nutrients.

Rose Gardening Tip 4 – Soak before planting. New rose bushes will get the best start if they’re soaked in a bucket of water for about 24 hours before you plant them. Not only will this ensure that your roots are well hydrated, but it prepares the plant for the big change its about to undergo.

Rose Gardening Tip 5 – Roses need deep roots. Most gardeners are aware that roses need ample water to survive and bloom. What many people don’t realize, however, that watering your roses too frequently prevents them from developing deep roots. A deep root system can help your rose survive during drought conditions, and will make it healthier overall. So, water your roses deeply 2-3 times a week rather than giving them a shallow watering more often.

Rose Gardening Tip 6 – Deadheading is crucial. If your rose bush is a repeat bloomer, deadheading is the best way to ensure that you’ll get the most blooms in a season. Get out there at least once a week and remove spent blooms.

Rose Gardening Tip 7 – Roses love garlic. Planting garlic near your rose bushes protect your rose bushes. Any member of the onion family is also a good companion plant for rose gardens, as are marigolds and thyme.

Rose Gardening Tip 8 - Some roses are just easier than others. Do some research before you buy your rose bushes. There are some varieties that are simply more disease resistant than others – and the best choices vary by region. You’ll make your rose gardening much simpler if you start with plants that grow well in your area and are not subject to disease.

Hopefully these tips will make your rose gardening experience more enjoyable and more successful. Rose gardening is an art, and you’ll learn more each and every year. Before you know it, you’ll have a whole list of your own tips to share!




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Gardening Rose Sharon News

Mount Sharon: A classical garden in Orange, Va. - Washington Post


Mount Sharon: A classical garden in Orange, Va.
Washington Post
The rose garden contains principles of geometry and symmetry that go back to the ancients. Romans fashioned a garden room named an exedra where busts of philosophers and deities were displayed. At Mount Sharon, the worthies are the Virginian founding ...

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Virginia garden made in the classical tradition - Monterey County Herald


Virginia garden made in the classical tradition
Monterey County Herald
By ADRIAN HIGGINS The view across the rose garden at Mount Sharon; the pergolas to the right offer a shady viewing platform and the gardenÕs four fountains provide the cooling sight and sound of water. Those who think making gardens in the classical ...
Gate to Colonial Revival garden swings back into a forgotten timeStaunton News Leader

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A gardener warms to yellow - Houston Chronicle


A gardener warms to yellow
Houston Chronicle
Photo: Sharon Steinmann / Houston Chronicle Melampodium likes sun and well-drained to dry conditions. Photo: John Everett / Houston Chronicle Daffodil, tulip, ranunculus, pansy, 'Lady Banks' rose, Carolina jessamine, Louisiana iris, daylily, calendula, ...

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Beyond The Garden Gate at Ottie Dailey's....A Patchwork Quilt of Garden Memories - Gulf Coast News Today


Beyond The Garden Gate at Ottie Dailey's....A Patchwork Quilt of Garden Memories
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"It gives the roses just what they need," she confides. She loves the traditional Southern gardens including Rose of Sharon, azaleas, sweet olives, camellias, banana shrubs, hydrangeas, four o'clocks, cannas and daylilies. Many of these are transplants ...

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Not your garden-variety Brentwood plant sale - San Jose Mercury News


Not your garden-variety Brentwood plant sale
San Jose Mercury News
Mexican evening primroses jostled for space with marigolds; Pincushion flowers, Rose of Sharon and lamb's ear shared the spotlight with the fancifully named flowers Kiss-me-over-the-garden-gate and Tower of Jewels. Hummingbird sage, woolly thyme, ...

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